User talk:Its just teddy

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Hello Its just teddy, and welcome to D&D Wiki! I hope you are enjoying D&D Wiki and have been finding the information here useful. Before you start contributing, we recommend you make sure your user preferences match your preferences.

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A strong and welcoming community exists on D&D Wiki, and I'm sure you will find us friendly. To enable the community to function, a number of policies are in effect. Most importantly, we follow and expect you to follow Wikipedia's guidelines on civility and etiquette when discussing anything. As most work has multiple authors, please do not delete content without following our removal process. When posting a comment on a talk page, please ensure you sign your name with four tildes (~~~~) or by clicking on the signature icon (). This will automatically produce your name and the date. I hope you come to enjoy D&D Wiki and the community. Welcome again, you are now a D&D Wikian. — Geodude671 (talk | contribs)‎ . . 16:18, 2 August 2017 (MDT)

Hello, Teddy! I'm glad to introduce myself to a new user :) I'm here because you seem to be having trouble understanding the issues with image copyright. The thing is, even if it doesn't seem like that big a deal to just grab images you found on the internet, D&D Wiki could get in trouble if you use them in articles without permission. That's why we have to be serious about sourcing images and making sure we can use them, so that D&D Wiki and its owners don't get in legal trouble. Does that make sense? If not, please reply below and let me know what you're having trouble with, and I'll do my best to help :) --GamerAim (talk) 20:15, 5 August 2017 (MDT)

I'd like to explain myself, since I see I upset you. Just to be clear, when you copy a picture to the wiki, we need to know 1) Who made the image, and 2) What license it's under (copyright, creative commons, or public domain). If an artist asserts copyright on their art, it's not fair to copy it without permission; if they've released it under a creative commons license, we still need to attribute them and provide a link.

"Google" isn't a source, it shows web search results. "Pinterest" isn't a source, it's an aggregate of images copied or linked to from other websites.

I don't delete willy nilly: I first use Google's reverse image search to try and find the original. In the case of Freya.jpg, I found the original at Flickr. The artist is Susan Rudat, and the image is under copyright. Here's the thing though: You could ask her for permission to copy it, using the comments on that page! You might get no reply, or she might say no, or might say yes but with caveats (e.g. lower resolution).

This is how I acquired the image I used at Crypt Thing (4e Creature). I contacted the artist and they gave me permission to upload a lower resolution image and providing I gave a link to the original. Marasmusine (talk) 02:49, 25 August 2017 (MDT)

gollark: Not significantly enough to do anything.
gollark: You can, with 391038592032939 widely distributed computers.
gollark: Welcome, inevitable visitor.
gollark: <@231856503756161025> Remy must obey normal quarantine protocols.
gollark: It has some sort of trainable thing? Interesting. Just Markov chains?
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